Discovering Connect openSUSE
Connect openSUSE is a hub helping people with different interests within openSUSE to find each other and connect in interest groups. There is relatively old wiki article about Connect that was created in very early stages, and talks more about technical aspects and some plans then social benefits that we can have from place like Connect.
Group is meant as a place where we can publish events and group contact information in one place. It will make easy for new openSUSE users that look for some activity, or want to give idea how to improve wiki, to find and contact us by simply typing "wiki" in the Connect search.
It is idea that is just started so we will for sure try to improve on it.
Here is announcement to opensuse-wiki mail list.
Chromium browser got accepted into openSUSE:Factory
After maintaining the Chromium browser in the openSUSE Contrib repositories, the last few weeks things got accelerated and as of this moment the Chromium browser has become officially part of openSUSE:Factory (the future 12.1).
Greek openSUSE community, Translation of openSUSE Weekly news in Greek (issue 193)

Hello everyone!
I am very pleased to announce the new issue (193) of openSUSE Weekly News in Greek.
In this issue you will read about:
* JosPoortvlieet: openSUSE Conference Fun!
* Andreas Jaeger: openSUSE Conference 2011 is over – Photos uploaded
* Nelson Marques: GNOME:Ayatana – Looking for contributor…
* Petr Mladek: LibreOffice 3.4 available for openSUSE
* Linux Journal/Joey Bernard: Parallel Programming Crash Course
As well as many interesting news about openSUSE and useful advice, which can make our lives easier.
Enough said though... Read more at: http://own.opensuse.gr, http://el.opensuse.org/Weekly_news or www.os-el.gr
We are always looking forward to receiving your comments as well as suggestions regarding things you would like to read about in our next issue.
The openSUSE Weekly News is being translated in the Greek language from issue #150. You can read older translated issues here: http://el.opensuse.org/Κατηγορία:Weekly_news_issues
Enjoy it!
Efstathios Agrapidis (efagra)
“Happy Pony” openSUSE?
At the openSUSE conference last week, Lydia Pintscher from the KDE Community Working Group led a BoF on “women in openSUSE”. This is what we (Stella, Bruno, Lydia, Pascal, Susanne, Greg) worked out:
There are very few women in openSUSE for a variety of reasons. In our perceiption, despite the good efforts of moderators on IRC, forums and mailing-lists, some attitudes there still persist, and we believe these are a key issue that keeps women away. To further address this as a small group, we decided to start at just one place, opensuse-project@. Here’s why and how:
There is quite some research on why there is so few “women in FLOSS” in general. One of the recurring topics there, and one that we also quickly came to in the BoF, was the ‘flaming’, or more generally, the negative possibilities of the direct, unfiltered yet anonymous communication on IRC, forums and mail.
We all value the speed and positive directness of those forms of communication — however it’s cutting off facial expression and physical reaction. So it’s very easy to miss the tone, without even noticing. To more sensitive souls, this is creating a barrier of entry that especially women do not want to cross, or if it hits you unprepared, will reject you, often with no return. Nota bene: this effect is not limited to women! It just happens to reject women more than men.
What’s going on there? On one side there is newcomers wanting to learn, and with a great potential to contribute, however with a “thin skin”, an expectation of being treated with respect and politeness, whatever that means. On the other side, there are knowledgeable people, often young, sometimes unpatient, maybe tired, frustrated themselves. Now the former ask naive questions while the latter “shoot out” a quick response without any visual feedback on what happens right after they hit the “send” button. Kazoom! And the frustration results into discussions that quickly are far beyond the original topic, frustrating, unproductive and the opposite of what we want: respect and getting things done.
openSUSE, like many other open source projects, has set the direction for mutual respect by working out Guiding Principles, and making members accept these. The openSUSE project Board is forming a body of volunteers who “enforce” these rules, something like the Community Working Group in the KDE project. The objective is to focus the speed and directness of the communication on productivity: turn the flaming energy of frustrations into creative energy that makes openSUSE a place to enjoy and to contribute to!
We, the BoF participants, want to simply support that effort, by working on just one list (opensuse-project@), and by providing additional material that complements the very high level goals set forth in the guiding principles.
Stay tuned 
Growing some openSUSE ARMs
Google +
Please click on the image(s) to see them in high resolution.


The week that was oSC 11
Education at OSC
Even if the last news from the Education project is just one month old, many people asked me during the openSUSE Conference why the Education project itself is currently so quiet.
Well, the “problem” is, that our Education team is currently more a team of technical specialists and many work is done behind the scenes without communication to “the outside”. So even if you did not hear from us for some weeks, we are still alive and coding!
Here are just a few examples, that are going on behind the scenes:
- Translation of the new openSUSE Education Portal is work in progress. Many thanks to our contributors Guillaume for the Français, Freek de Kruijf for the Nederlands, Sabarth for the Português, Gankov for the Русский (Russian) Portal translation!
- Kirill is currently reviewing all 425(!) packages in the Build Service Education project and submitting them to openSUSE Factory afterwards – so openSUSE 12.1 will come with a huge set of packages directly inside the official repository.
- Cyberorg is working on the next release of the openSUSE Edu Li-f-e DVD with the LTSP integration.
- Anubusg1 and many others (the project currently lists 44 maintainers) are doing the “normal” packaging stuff like upgrading and fixing packages for 12.1 (aka Factory)
The Desktop4Education project from Austria was again present at the Conference and gave a great overview of the current status of the project during their talk. Good to hear that the project is being frequently used as a reference case by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture and as such promoted by them throughout Austria.
Talking with Andre Massing from the Simula Research Laboratory during his talk at the conference was quite interesting. Looks like the Science project might see some very interesting new packages in the next months. During the discussion, we agree that the Education and the Science project can share a lot of efforts in their project setups and organization. But they will stay separated (at least in the Build Service) as their audience is very different, even if they share some packages (which is currently done via links inside the Build Service).
Greek openSUSE community, Translation of openSUSE Weekly news in Greek (issue 192)
Back to Thessaloniki after a great openSUSE conference in Nuremberg and I am very pleased to announce the new issue (192) of openSUSE Weekly News in Greek.
In this issue you will read about:
* Jos Poortvlieet: Sponsors present at openSUSE Conference 2011
* Jos Poortvlieet: Bretzn at oSC
* Kai-Uwe Behrmann: Oyranos @ rwx³
* Greek openSUSE Ambassadors: openSUSE Greek community and 76th International Trade Fair,
Thessaloniki
* Wazi/Anatoliy A. Dimitrov: How to Secure Your Apache Web Server
As well as many interesting news about openSUSE and useful advice, which can make our lives easier.
Enough said though... Read more at: http://own.opensuse.gr, http://el.opensuse.org/Weekly_news or www.os-el.gr
We are always looking forward to receiving your comments as well as suggestions regarding things you would like to read about in our next issue.
The openSUSE Weekly News is being translated in the Greek language from issue #150. You can read older translated issues here: http://el.opensuse.org/Κατηγορία:Weekly_news_issues
Enjoy it!
Efstathios Agrapidis (efagra)
MonoTouch Tips & Tricks: Updating the Location of an MKAnnotation
I just spent a day figuring this out, so figured I'd share it with the world because I'm sure other people are going to want to know how to do this...
So the question is,
How can I get my MKMapView to respond to coordinate changes in my custom MKAnnotations?
As it turns out, this is incredibly simple. In your MKAnnotation subclass, whenever you want to change your Coordinate property value, you need to do the following:
void UpdateCoordinate (CLLocationCoordinate2D newCoordinate)
{
this.WillChangeValue ("coordinate");
this.Coordinate = newCoordinate;
this.DidChangeValue ("coordinate");
}
That's it! It really is that simple...
The reason this works is because MKMapView observes changes in its list of MKAnnotations, you just need to signal to it that changes are about to happen (and did happen).
Happy hacking!



